Longer term, there were plans to regenerate the area with residential, retail and leisure developments. |
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Of practical interest to humans, said Carroll, is the salamander's ability to regenerate limbs. |
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The season is a total write-off, but we are all aware of the need to regenerate ourselves ahead of the New Zealand tour. |
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Even more important, why can't we regenerate tissue to repair damaged organs like our heart or lungs? |
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The drug, called Tissuegene-C, is used to treat degenerative arthritis, also known as osteoarthritis, by helping regenerate cartilage in joints. |
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A large fraction of these embryos aborted on the germination medium and were not able to regenerate plantlets. |
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It generally takes up to a week for your eye to regenerate the surface tissue that was removed. |
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We are multicellular organisms that regenerate some of our cells continuously. |
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The studies suggest that only embryonic cells have the potential to regenerate diseased tissues. |
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But just why some animals can regenerate while others are unable to do so is not clear. |
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They could quickly regenerate their missing limbs, and whatever had fallen off was still usable. |
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Scientists have long known that bone marrow stem cells regenerate blood cells. |
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Studies have shown that mammalian cells appear to maintain the pathways required for tissues to regenerate. |
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She is using biodegradable polymers, basically specialty plastics, to help severed nerves regenerate and reconnect cell by cell. |
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The point is that once upon a time we didn't think that brains could regenerate. |
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Goldfish retinal axons are able to regenerate and grow over isolated fish oligodendrocytes in vitro. |
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Estrogen may also greatly decrease a woman's risk for Alzheimer's disease by helping neurons grow and regenerate and decreasing inflammation. |
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Because the tendon must regenerate, the rehab period can last from four to nine months. |
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Debriding the devitalized tissue will allow the underlying healthy tissue to regenerate. |
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But we must continually regenerate ourselves to remain successful in an increasingly competitive environment. |
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And it would release an area of land which could help regenerate the town centre. |
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It will help regenerate the area and bring in vast numbers of visitors who will boost the borough's economy. |
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The publication of the Gambling Bill has been accompanied by claims that new casinos will regenerate rundown areas and be good for the economy. |
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The government's plans to regenerate the area were announced in March last year by Tony Blair and John Prescott. |
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He has even begun winning commissions from Foster, including a plan to regenerate a site at Elephant and Castle in south London. |
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The excitement created by an arena will boost and help regenerate the whole borough. |
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If God is going to choose and regenerate a person spiritually then why do we need to share the gospel with others? |
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Only a supernatural act, a work of God's grace, can regenerate those people, which is everyone. |
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In what respects does the way God regenerates us resemble and differ from the way we regenerate ourselves? |
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At the same time they would like to regenerate the sulfuric acid to minimize costs. |
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Obedience does not merit justification, but it does flow from the regenerate hearts of those who have been justified. |
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Sadly, churchgoers are not necessarily the same thing as regenerate believers, even if numbered in thousands in a particular locality. |
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Once again we see that Edwards is suggesting instances where a person can be regenerate before conversion to an explicit knowledge of Christ. |
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Believers, regenerate persons, who believe in Him, and rely on Him, have put on Christ. |
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The church is not a household of only the regenerate, but is rather a household of all those under covenant obligation. |
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The new charismatic fellowships have warm fellowship and regenerate church membership. |
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Gospel preaching is God's ordained way of reaching men and women, regenerate or unregenerate. |
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What natural men need is regeneration, and what the regenerate need is to be edified in the faith. |
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They cut away the dead wood, the ivy, the Russian vine, leaving a nearly naked yew and Scots pine, which may well survive and regenerate. |
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He brought to our attention the tiny zebra fish which could fully regenerate even severely damaged myocardium. |
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Large or disturbed plants regenerate clonally by layering of drooping shoots. |
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But figuring out exactly how to regenerate ammonia borane from the residuum left after hydrogen has been extracted remains a stumbling block. |
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Sheffield Council leader Jan Wilson said the Park Hill apartments were listed buildings so the only option was to regenerate them. |
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The threat of ash dieback is mitigated by the vigour with which new trees regenerate in the British climate. |
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From such studies as those of Be and Spero and Wilde, we know that foraminifera sometimes regenerate their tests after injury. |
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However, this approach has so far failed because of failure to regenerate plants from culture. |
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First, stem cells, when mixed with biomaterials known as scaffolds, can help regenerate bone growth and damaged tissue. |
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So forgive me if I say phooey to the fashionable PR twaddle which claims that casinos can regenerate our urban landscape. |
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The result is a movement of the transfected blastemal cells to more proximal regions in the intercalating regenerate. |
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The bloom, however, begins to regenerate within a few days, but it does not attain its original prominence. |
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Bradford Council said the work was essential to create more jobs and regenerate the south Bradford area. |
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In citrus, epicotyl and internodal stem segments have been widely used to regenerate plants via organogenesis. |
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The four-carbon succinate undergoes a series of rearrangements to regenerate oxaloacetate. |
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Grown on a disused china clay pit, the project has helped regenerate the area. |
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The trust, set up in 1990 to safeguard the site, is leading a scheme to regenerate the former coalfield area. |
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But once the nerves are permanently damaged by loud sounds, you cannot regenerate them. |
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In lepidopterans, extirpation of imaginal wing discs in the final instar delays pupation in order for the larva to regenerate lost tissue. |
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Was it a lack of mental ability, foresight and imagination that was needed many years ago to regenerate what was once a fine city? |
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Unlike many body tissues, nerve cells and fibers in the central nervous system cannot regenerate. |
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The planarians used in these studies, also called flatworms, live in fresh water and have a singular ability to regenerate. |
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Initially, cellular growth increases markedly in an effort to regenerate tissue in response to irritation. |
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The first addresses the question of how to preserve, respect or regenerate genius loci under fast changing conditions. |
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This is a prime example of an award that increases access as well as helping regenerate an area that has suffered hardship over the last year. |
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The business park will help regenerate this area disadvantaged by years of industrial decay and dereliction. |
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Even in the case of severe damage to the entire intestinal wall, tissues seem to regenerate well. |
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The money raised from the events would be used by the parish council to regenerate the area. |
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Original sin, he said, turned the human heart into a fomes peccati, operative at all times, even in the regenerate. |
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A nonrenewable resource is one that does not regenerate itself within a reasonable period in human timescales. |
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Some plant species can regenerate from seemingly unpromisingly small fragments. |
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Fish and amphibians can regenerate optic nerve tissue, so Benowitz and his colleagues examined goldfish and found two compounds essential to this process. |
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This new sense opens the eyes of the regenerate saint to see and understand divine things in a way that had been impossible for him before his conversion. |
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Engelsma also rejected the charge in a listener's question that the Protestant Reformed person seeks to determine whether a person is regenerate before reaching out to them. |
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For a wound to cicatrize more quickly or for tissue to regenerate after an operation, it is now proposed that stem cells be transplanted to the traumatized region. |
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He praises the government for putting in money to regenerate the area. |
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This design may play a part in the marvelous ability of stentors to regenerate even when only a tiny fraction of the original individual is left intact. |
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The skate park is part of overall plans to regenerate the park and the idea came out of a public meeting two years ago to find out what people using the park wanted. |
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Her work includes identifying local herbs and spices, plus resurrecting centuries-old harvesting and curing methods that preserve and regenerate rain forests. |
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And the baddies, who light up, regenerate body parts, and occasionally overheat and explode, are pretty silly. |
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The mammalian liver can regenerate if a part of it is removed, the antlers of male deer regenerate each year, and fractured bones can mend by a regenerative process. |
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The Douglas-fir, ponderosa pine, and sugar pine planted in this area will help regenerate an ecosystem inhabited by wildlife, including bald eagles. |
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The vet told me that she thought this was primarily about the cat not eating and that if I could force feed her, her liver would regenerate and she'd probably be okay. |
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Mammals cannot regenerate lost limbs, although they do have a limited capacity to replace the ends of digits, and nematodes and rotifers cannot regenerate at all. |
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It is envisaged that these works will help regenerate interest in the field of historical verse among both Celticists and Medievalists in general. |
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Thus previously authoritarian government officials joined with previously suspicious villagers to successfully regenerate the degraded sal forests of southwestern Bengal. |
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As in crustaceans, autotomy must be done before a critical period so that there is sufficient time to regenerate the appendage before the next ecdysis. |
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Now that scientists understand that brain cells can regenerate, there may finally be a glimmer of hope in treating the horrible ailments that destroy them. |
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A spokeswoman for Sheffield Council said the overall aim was to regenerate the area by demolishing housing in a poor condition in areas of deepening social exclusion. |
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Such is the depravity of man in general, that did not the Lord keep back even the regenerate from evils and falses, he would cast himself headlong into hell. |
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English Heritage also warns today against the wholesale destruction of old homes as part of efforts to regenerate the housing market in areas such as South Yorkshire and Hull. |
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Plans to regenerate the graveyard at Heaton Baptist church are being put into action by a group of Bradford residents fighting to protect the Victorian cemetery. |
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I will leave the lights off until the tank cycles, discouraging any green diatom growth while dosing with calcium to regenerate the varying reds of coralline algae. |
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Historical photographs and museum artefacts have been used to regenerate traditional barkcloth production on Erromango and mat-making on Ambae, amongst other projects. |
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It should have required less energy for the crinoid to regenerate the damaged pinnules than to regenerate a lost or damaged tegmen containing part of the gut tract. |
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That kind of browsing was a purely visual experience that usually cleared my mind, allowing it to regenerate. |
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Growing tumours do not regenerate epidermal layers and cuticles. |
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Collagen hydrolysate is a protein that helps regenerate and synthesize the cartilage in humans and animals, and supplements come from pigs, cows, oxen, chickens or sheep. |
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Murry is using embryonic stem cells to regenerate heart tissue. |
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Glucosamine is thought to be chondroprotective, as well as an agent that restores cartilage by providing the material needed for chondrocytes to regenerate cartilage tissue. |
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That class of people has the natural tendency to regenerate according to bellow. |
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Laboratory rats that received the triple therapy were able to regenerate nerve fibers in the spinal cord and had improved movement 8 weeks after treatment. |
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Plans are being drawn up as part of the Energy Coast masterplan to regenerate West Cumbria. |
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These enamel-like aberrations in cementogenesis are intriguing and could offer new insights and strategies to regenerate acellular cementum. |
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With the decline of traditional industry, the city has adopted a plan to regenerate and reinvent itself as a cultural centre. |
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In an effort to regenerate and boost declining tourism, a number of projects are under way or proposed. |
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During the first half of the 21st century, the Wirral Waters development is planned to regenerate much of the dockland. |
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Ophiuroids can readily regenerate lost arms or arm segments unless all arms are lost. |
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Moreover, the Amphiuridae can regenerate gut and gonad fragments lost along with the arms. |
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If the siphons are browsed by fish or other predators, they regenerate in a few days. |
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There is a chance a tropical cyclone could regenerate if it managed to get back over open warm water, such as with Hurricane Ivan. |
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In the Baptism service the priest explicitly pronounces the baptised infant as being now regenerate. |
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Once formed, these anion free radicals reduce molecular oxygen to superoxide, and regenerate the unchanged parent compound. |
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They are attracted by young shoots on coppice stools, so must be excluded if the coppice is to regenerate. |
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Madness, even under the pretext of despair, is never a force that can regenerate the world. That is why today we are all Americans. |
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Having brought the dead soul to life, the Spirit comes like fire in its terrible and tormentuous power, to purify the regenerate sinner. |
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The same cells that regenerate clipped fingernails can be used to regrow amputated fingertips, according to new research. |
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Caerphilly Common should be made part of a Green Belt and nature left to regenerate it to its natural state of durmast oak woodland. |
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This is because, unlike most cells in the body, the olfactory ensheathing cells continue to regenerate. |
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Through the radio frequency both the dermis and hypodermis skin layers are affected safely to regenerate new collagen and shrink fat cells. |
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A NETWORK of pruners has been set up to help regenerate long-lost orchards in Powys. |
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Forced exfoliation gives the skin the wrong message and makes the skin regenerate faster. |
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Studies in Europe show that severed lymph vessels regenerate with constant MLD therapy. |
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Milk thistle has been used to detoxify the liver and even help liver cells regenerate themselves for over 2,000 years. |
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While current treatments kill the bulk of the cancer cell, the cancer root escapes the therapy and can regenerate into a new cancer mass. |
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It began to regenerate as soon as American forces left Iraq. |
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In some lab tests, stem cells that have been effectively deprogrammed to help regenerate a particular organ have appeared to turn cancerous. |
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Because clearcutting is necessary to regenerate aspen, a species beneficial to many types of wildlife, the brothers harvest patches from two to 15 acres in size. |
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After amputation, siphons can regenerate providing a renewable source of secondary production that has been shown to maintain higher trophic levels. |
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The AWT SolutionvbCrLFAWT has successfully developed a few effective products, which reverse the stressed water crystals to regenerate the quality of the water. |
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The serials The Deadly Assassin and Mawdryn Undead would later establish that a Time Lord can only regenerate 12 times, for a total of 13 incarnations. |
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Self-healing in materials is a biomimetic concept modeled after the capability of biological systems to autonomically repair or regenerate after damage. |
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Lizards partially regenerate their tails over a period of weeks. |
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Sea urchins are being used in longevity studies for comparison between the young and old of the species, particularly for their ability to regenerate tissue as needed. |
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Discarded arms have not been shown to have the ability to regenerate. |
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Although the adults of simple vertebrates have the ability to regenerate entire nephrons by a process called nephron neogenesis, this capacity is absent in birds and mammals. |
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Even amongst planarian flatworms, famous for their ability to regenerate from random tissue fragments, species exist that have completely lost the ability to regenerate. |
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